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# Step by Step Visual Studio 2019 Instructions
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### Install the tools
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Install Visual Studio Community 2019 from [visualstudio.microsoft.com/vs/ ](https://visualstudio.microsoft.com/vs/ ). Older versions are not supported as PrusaSlicer requires support for C++17.
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Select all workload options for C++
Install git for Windows from [gitforwindows.org ](https://gitforwindows.org/ )
Download and run the exe accepting all defaults
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### Download sources
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Clone the respository. To place it in C:\src\PrusaSlicer, run:
```
c:> mkdir src
c:> cd src
c:\src> git clone https://github.com/prusa3d/PrusaSlicer.git
```
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### Compile the dependencies.
Dependencies are updated seldomly, thus they are compiled out of the PrusaSlicer source tree.
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Go to the Windows Start Menu and Click on "Visual Studio 2019" folder, then select the ->"x64 Native Tools Command Prompt" to open a command window and run the following:
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```
cd c:\src\PrusaSlicer\deps
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mkdir build
cd build
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cmake .. -G "Visual Studio 16 2019" -DDESTDIR="c:\src\PrusaSlicer-deps"
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msbuild /m ALL_BUILD.vcxproj // This took 13.5 minutes on my machine: core I7-7700K @ 4.2Ghz with 32GB main memory and 20min on a average laptop
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```
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### Generate Visual Studio project file for PrusaSlicer, referencing the precompiled dependencies.
Go to the Windows Start Menu and Click on "Visual Studio 2019" folder, then select the ->"x64 Native Tools Command Prompt" to open a command window and run the following:
```
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cd c:\src\PrusaSlicer\
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mkdir build
cd build
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cmake .. -G "Visual Studio 16 2019" -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH="c:\src\PrusaSlicer-deps\usr\local"
```
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### Compile PrusaSlicer.
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Double-click c:\src\PrusaSlicer\build\PrusaSlicer.sln to open in Visual Studio 2019.
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OR
Open Visual Studio for C++ development (VS asks this the first time you start it).
Select PrusaSlicer_app_gui as your startup project (right-click->Set as Startup Project).
Run Build->Rebuild Solution once to populate all required dependency modules. This is NOT done automatically when you build/run. If you run both Debug and Release variants, you will need to do this once for each.
Debug->Start Debugging or press F5
PrusaSlicer should start. You're up and running!
note: Thanks to @douggorgen for the original guide, as an answer for a issue
# The below information is out of date, but still useful for reference purposes
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We have switched to MS Visual Studio 2019.
We don't use MSVS 2013 any more. At the moment we are in the process of creating new pre-built dependency bundles
and updating this document. In the meantime, you will need to compile the dependencies yourself
[the same way as before ](#building-the-dependencies-package-yourself )
except with CMake generators for MSVS 2019 instead of 2013.
Thank you for understanding.
---
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# Building PrusaSlicer on Microsoft Windows
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~~The currently supported way of building PrusaSlicer on Windows is with CMake and MS Visual Studio 2013.
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You can use the free [Visual Studio 2013 Community Edition ](https://www.visualstudio.com/vs/older-downloads/ ).
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CMake installer can be downloaded from [the official website ](https://cmake.org/download/ ).~~
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~~Building with newer versions of MSVS (2015, 2017) may work too as reported by some of our users.~~
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_Note:_ Thanks to [**@supermerill** ](https://github.com/supermerill ) for testing and inspiration for this guide.
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### Dependencies
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On Windows PrusaSlicer is built against statically built libraries.
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~~We provide a prebuilt package of all the needed dependencies. This package only works on Visual Studio 2013, so~~ if you are using a newer version of Visual Studio, you need to compile the dependencies yourself as per [below ](#building-the-dependencies-package-yourself ).
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The package comes in a several variants:
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- ~~64 bit, Release mode only (41 MB, 578 MB unpacked)~~
- ~~64 bit, Release and Debug mode (88 MB, 1.3 GB unpacked)~~
- ~~32 bit, Release mode only (38 MB, 520 MB unpacked)~~
- ~~32 bit, Release and Debug mode (74 MB, 1.1 GB unpacked)~~
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When unsure, use the _Release mode only_ variant, the _Release and Debug_ variant is only needed for debugging & development.
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If you're unsure where to unpack the package, unpack it into `C:\local\` (but it can really be anywhere).
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Alternatively you can also compile the dependencies yourself, see below.
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### Building PrusaSlicer with Visual Studio
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First obtain the PrusaSlicer sources via either git or by extracting the source archive.
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Then you will need to note down the so-called 'prefix path' to the dependencies, this is the location of the dependencies packages + `\usr\local` appended.
For example on 64 bits this would be `C:\local\destdir-64\usr\local` . The prefix path will need to be passed to CMake.
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When ready, open the relevant Visual Studio command line and `cd` into the directory with PrusaSlicer sources.
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Use these commands to prepare Visual Studio solution file:
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mkdir build
cd build
cmake .. -G "Visual Studio 12 Win64" -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH="< insert prefix path here > "
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Note that if you're building a 32-bit variant, you will need to change the `"Visual Studio 12 Win64"` to just `"Visual Studio 12"` .
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Conversely, if you're using Visual Studio version other than 2013, the version number will need to be changed accordingly.
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If `cmake` has finished without errors, go to the build directory and open the `PrusaSlicer.sln` solution file in Visual Studio.
Before building, make sure you're building the right project (use one of those starting with `PrusaSlicer_app_...` ) and that you're building
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with the right configuration, i.e. _Release_ vs. _Debug_ . When unsure, choose _Release_ .
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Note that you won't be able to build a _Debug_ variant against a _Release_ -only dependencies package.
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#### Installing using the `INSTALL` project
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PrusaSlicer can be run from the Visual Studio or from Visual Studio's build directory (`src\Release` or `src\Debug` ),
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but for longer-term usage you might want to install somewhere using the `INSTALL` project.
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By default, this installs into `C:\Program Files\PrusaSlicer` .
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To customize the install path, use the `-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=<path of your choice>` when invoking `cmake` .
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### Building from the command line
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There are several options for building from the command line:
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- [msbuild ](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/visualstudio/msbuild/msbuild-reference?view=vs-2017&viewFallbackFrom=vs-2013 )
- [Ninja ](https://ninja-build.org/ )
- [nmake ](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/build/nmake-reference?view=vs-2017 )
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To build with msbuild, use the same CMake command as in previous paragraph and then build using
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msbuild /m /P:Configuration=Release ALL_BUILD.vcxproj
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To build with Ninja or nmake, replace the `-G` option in the CMake call with `-G Ninja` or `-G "NMake Makefiles"` , respectively.
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Then use either `ninja` or `nmake` to start the build.
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To install, use `msbuild /P:Configuration=Release INSTALL.vcxproj` , `ninja install` , or `nmake install` .
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### Building the dependencies package yourself
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The dependencies package is built using CMake scripts inside the `deps` subdirectory of PrusaSlicer sources.
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(This is intentionally not interconnected with the CMake scripts in the rest of the sources.)
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Open the preferred Visual Studio command line (64 or 32 bit variant) and `cd` into the directory with PrusaSlicer sources.
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Then `cd` into the `deps` directory and use these commands to build:
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mkdir build
cd build
cmake .. -G "Visual Studio 12 Win64" -DDESTDIR="C:\local\destdir-custom"
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msbuild /m ALL_BUILD.vcxproj
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You can also use the Visual Studio GUI or other generators as mentioned above.
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The `DESTDIR` option is the location where the bundle will be installed.
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This may be customized. If you leave it empty, the `DESTDIR` will be placed inside the same `build` directory.
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Warning: If the `build` directory is nested too deep inside other folders, various file paths during the build
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become too long and the build might fail due to file writing errors (\*). For this reason, it is recommended to
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place the `build` directory relatively close to the drive root.
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Note that the build variant that you may choose using Visual Studio (i.e. _Release_ or _Debug_ etc.) when building the dependency package is **not relevant** .
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The dependency build will by default build _both_ the _Release_ and _Debug_ variants regardless of what you choose in Visual Studio.
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You can disable building of the debug variant by passing the
-DDEP_DEBUG=OFF
option to CMake, this will only produce a _Release_ build.
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Refer to the CMake scripts inside the `deps` directory to see which dependencies are built in what versions and how this is done.
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\*) Specifically, the problem arises when building boost. Boost build tool appends all build options into paths of
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intermediate files, which are not handled correctly by either `b2.exe` or possibly `ninja` (?).